Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions. / Tietjen, Anne.

2020. Abstract from ACHS 2020 Futures, London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tietjen, A 2020, 'Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions', ACHS 2020 Futures, London, United Kingdom, 26/08/2020 - 30/08/2020.

APA

Tietjen, A. (2020). Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions. Abstract from ACHS 2020 Futures, London, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Tietjen A. Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions. 2020. Abstract from ACHS 2020 Futures, London, United Kingdom.

Author

Tietjen, Anne. / Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions. Abstract from ACHS 2020 Futures, London, United Kingdom.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{c9b8bdb56573454295a2885a331bcb3e,
title = "Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions",
abstract = "This paper discusses initial experiences with architecture exhibitions as a research tool in critical heritage studies. The project Public Space in European Social Housing explores the publicness of spaces on five post-war social housing estates over time. We study dynamic interactions between people and the physical spaces they share to better understand how cultural encounters happen and how integration can be better sustained. By working with exhibitions, we aim to develop a novel approach to studying and representing public spaces as sites of publicness. Exhibitions are a well-proven format for communicating architecture and for sparking debate about architecture. Building on this tradition, we work with physical and web-based exhibitions to articulate, communicate and question ongoing research. Importantly, we use exhibitions not only as a tool for knowledge exchange but also for transdisciplinary knowledge development with multidisciplinary researchers (architects, landscape architects, urban planners, architectural historians, anthropologists, and sociologists) in collaboration with many non-academic partners (from an art photographer, to housing associations and national and European NGO{\textquoteright}s.This paper reflects upon the form, content and organisation of the first two exhibitions specifically with regard to 1) using architecture exhibitions as a transdisciplinary research tool and 2) making relational representations of public spaces as sites of publicness. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Public space, publicness, Social housing, architecture exhibition, research tool, relational representation, relational architecture",
author = "Anne Tietjen",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
day = "26",
language = "English",
note = "ACHS 2020 Futures : ASSOCIATION OF CRITICAL HERITAGE STUDIES 5TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE, ACHS ; Conference date: 26-08-2020 Through 30-08-2020",
url = "https://achs2020london.com/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Researching publicness in social housing through architecture exhibitions

AU - Tietjen, Anne

PY - 2020/8/26

Y1 - 2020/8/26

N2 - This paper discusses initial experiences with architecture exhibitions as a research tool in critical heritage studies. The project Public Space in European Social Housing explores the publicness of spaces on five post-war social housing estates over time. We study dynamic interactions between people and the physical spaces they share to better understand how cultural encounters happen and how integration can be better sustained. By working with exhibitions, we aim to develop a novel approach to studying and representing public spaces as sites of publicness. Exhibitions are a well-proven format for communicating architecture and for sparking debate about architecture. Building on this tradition, we work with physical and web-based exhibitions to articulate, communicate and question ongoing research. Importantly, we use exhibitions not only as a tool for knowledge exchange but also for transdisciplinary knowledge development with multidisciplinary researchers (architects, landscape architects, urban planners, architectural historians, anthropologists, and sociologists) in collaboration with many non-academic partners (from an art photographer, to housing associations and national and European NGO’s.This paper reflects upon the form, content and organisation of the first two exhibitions specifically with regard to 1) using architecture exhibitions as a transdisciplinary research tool and 2) making relational representations of public spaces as sites of publicness.

AB - This paper discusses initial experiences with architecture exhibitions as a research tool in critical heritage studies. The project Public Space in European Social Housing explores the publicness of spaces on five post-war social housing estates over time. We study dynamic interactions between people and the physical spaces they share to better understand how cultural encounters happen and how integration can be better sustained. By working with exhibitions, we aim to develop a novel approach to studying and representing public spaces as sites of publicness. Exhibitions are a well-proven format for communicating architecture and for sparking debate about architecture. Building on this tradition, we work with physical and web-based exhibitions to articulate, communicate and question ongoing research. Importantly, we use exhibitions not only as a tool for knowledge exchange but also for transdisciplinary knowledge development with multidisciplinary researchers (architects, landscape architects, urban planners, architectural historians, anthropologists, and sociologists) in collaboration with many non-academic partners (from an art photographer, to housing associations and national and European NGO’s.This paper reflects upon the form, content and organisation of the first two exhibitions specifically with regard to 1) using architecture exhibitions as a transdisciplinary research tool and 2) making relational representations of public spaces as sites of publicness.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Public space

KW - publicness

KW - Social housing

KW - architecture exhibition

KW - research tool

KW - relational representation

KW - relational architecture

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - ACHS 2020 Futures

Y2 - 26 August 2020 through 30 August 2020

ER -

ID: 256774301